US11952980B2 - Method for controlling a wind power installation - Google Patents
Method for controlling a wind power installation Download PDFInfo
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- US11952980B2 US11952980B2 US17/579,389 US202217579389A US11952980B2 US 11952980 B2 US11952980 B2 US 11952980B2 US 202217579389 A US202217579389 A US 202217579389A US 11952980 B2 US11952980 B2 US 11952980B2
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/0276—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor controlling rotor speed, e.g. variable speed
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/04—Automatic control; Regulation
- F03D7/042—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller
- F03D7/043—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller characterised by the type of control logic
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/022—Adjusting aerodynamic properties of the blades
- F03D7/0224—Adjusting blade pitch
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/028—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor controlling wind motor output power
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/0296—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor to prevent, counteract or reduce noise emissions
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/04—Automatic control; Regulation
- F03D7/042—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller
- F03D7/043—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller characterised by the type of control logic
- F03D7/044—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller characterised by the type of control logic with PID control
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
- F03D7/04—Automatic control; Regulation
- F03D7/042—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
- F03—MACHINES OR ENGINES FOR LIQUIDS; WIND, SPRING, OR WEIGHT MOTORS; PRODUCING MECHANICAL POWER OR A REACTIVE PROPULSIVE THRUST, NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
- F03D—WIND MOTORS
- F03D7/00—Controlling wind motors
- F03D7/02—Controlling wind motors the wind motors having rotation axis substantially parallel to the air flow entering the rotor
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- F03D7/042—Automatic control; Regulation by means of an electrical or electronic controller
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- F05—INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
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- F—MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
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- F05—INDEXING SCHEMES RELATING TO ENGINES OR PUMPS IN VARIOUS SUBCLASSES OF CLASSES F01-F04
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- Y02—TECHNOLOGIES OR APPLICATIONS FOR MITIGATION OR ADAPTATION AGAINST CLIMATE CHANGE
- Y02E—REDUCTION OF GREENHOUSE GAS [GHG] EMISSIONS, RELATED TO ENERGY GENERATION, TRANSMISSION OR DISTRIBUTION
- Y02E10/00—Energy generation through renewable energy sources
- Y02E10/70—Wind energy
- Y02E10/72—Wind turbines with rotation axis in wind direction
Definitions
- the present invention relates to a method for controlling a wind power installation.
- the present invention also relates to a corresponding wind power installation.
- Wind power installations are known; they obtain electrical power from wind.
- they usually have a rotor with rotor blades, which are moved by the wind.
- the rotor then rotates at a rotor speed, which also depends on the wind speed, and drives a generator.
- the rotor blades can be adjusted in their angle of attack, which is referred to as pitching. Furthermore, the output power or a generator torque of the generator can be influenced for controlling the wind power installation. This also results in a variable rotor speed, and consequently variable generator speed. In the case of a gearless wind power installation, the rotor speed corresponds to the generator speed.
- Controlling the wind power installation particularly has the task of ensuring operation at low rotational speeds with the most optimum possible power, in which as much power as possible is generated.
- the wind power installation has to be controlled in such a way that a rotational speed limitation and a power limitation are maintained.
- the rotational speed range in partial-load operation also includes a speed range in which there is a point of resonance of the wind power installation.
- a point of resonance is circumvented by avoiding rotational speeds that lie in such a resonance range.
- circumventing a rotational speed may be problematic, because a point of discontinuity is thereby created in the operating characteristic. That may lead to problems in the practical implementation of such circumventing control.
- One or more embodiments are directed to providing control that also works well in rotational speed ranges that lie in the range of a resonant frequency and/or in the range of a transition from partial-load operation to full-load operation.
- a method for controlling a wind power installation having an aerodynamic rotor which is operated with variable speed and which has rotor blades that are adjustable in their blade angle.
- the wind power installation may be operated in a partial-load range and in a full-load range. In the partial-load range, there are wind speeds up to a rated wind speed, and in the full-load range there are wind speeds from the rated wind speed.
- the ranges may overlap slightly, especially since the wind speed can fluctuate and also cannot be determined to any accuracy whatsoever.
- the wind power installation in the partial-load range is controlled by an open-loop operating-characteristic control that uses an operating characteristic.
- the operating characteristic presets a relationship between the rotational speed, to be specific the rotor speed, and a generator state variable to be set.
- the generator state variable to be set may be a generator power or a generator torque.
- the operating-characteristic control takes place such that a value of the generator state variable preset by the operating characteristic is set in dependence on a detected speed.
- An operating characteristic may also be preset by a functional description, for example a formula or function.
- the operating characteristic may also be stored as a table.
- the generator state variable is the generator power
- a rotational speed is detected and the operating characteristic gives for the detected rotational speed an associated value to be set of the generator power.
- This generator power is then set.
- the blade angle is left unchanged here.
- the set generator power then also leads in dependence on the rotational speed to a generator torque, which counteracts a rotor torque that is produced in the rotor by the wind.
- the wind power installation is controlled by a closed-loop pitch control, in which the rotational speed is controlled to a speed setpoint value by adjusting the blade angles.
- the rotational speed is controlled to a rated speed value. This serves particularly for protecting the wind power installation from overloading. If, therefore, the rotational speed exceeds this speed value to which the wind power installation is to be controlled, the rotor blades are adjusted in their blade angle, to be specific are turned out of the wind, at least by a degree or a few degrees. As a result, less power is taken from the wind and as a result the rotational speed can be lowered or kept at the desired value.
- the wind power installation is controlled by a speed-power control, in which the rotational speed is controlled to a speed setpoint value by adjusting the generator state variable.
- a speed-power control in which the rotational speed is controlled to a speed setpoint value by adjusting the generator state variable.
- this presettable speed range of the partial-load range may be referred to as an avoidance range, in which to be specific there is a speed that is to be avoided.
- This provided speed-power control then allows the rotational speed to be controlled to a speed at the beginning or end of the presettable speed range of the partial-load range. Consequently, the rotational speed that lies in particular in the middle of such a speed range, which therefore lies in the middle of the avoidance range, can be omitted.
- the speed-power therefore takes place such that, in an outer cascade, a first acceleration setpoint value of the rotor is determined from a comparison of a preset setpoint speed with a detected actual speed by way of a first closed-loop controller. To this extent, this control error of the speed is converted into this acceleration setpoint value.
- This acceleration setpoint value of the rotor can consequently be understood as an acceleration value by which the rotor is to be accelerated.
- the acceleration setpoint value may also assume negative values and to this extent indicate how the rotational speed is to be reduced.
- a generator setpoint value is determined as a setpoint value for the generator state variable from a comparison of the first acceleration setpoint value with a detected acceleration actual value of the rotor by way of a second closed-loop controller.
- the second controller therefore converts the control error of the rotor acceleration into a generator power setpoint value or a generator torque setpoint value, depending on which of the two variants is provided for the generator state variable.
- a change to a closed-loop speed control is proposed for particular ranges.
- a change is therefore made from an open-loop control to a closed-loop control.
- the closed-loop control to be specific the speed control, a special cascade structure which controls the rotational speed in the outer cascade and for this controls a torque in the inner cascade is provided here.
- the speed-power control has an integral component (e.g., integration capability), in particular that the second controller has an integral component.
- integral component e.g., integration capability
- the second controller has an integral component.
- the integral component allows the output power to be maintained even without permanent control errors.
- the integral component may be used in the inner cascade.
- the inner cascade produces from the setpoint/actual-value comparison for the acceleration value a generator power or a generator torque, which can to this extent be regarded as a manipulated variable.
- a ramping up of this manipulated variable by the integral component is immediately implemented in the generator and could have an immediate effect, so that the integral component in this inner cascade is proposed.
- the first acceleration setpoint value and the acceleration actual value are respectively formed as an acceleration power.
- the acceleration power is assigned to a rotor acceleration and describes a power that is required to bring about the rotor acceleration.
- Such power may also be correlated with power that is available for closed-loop control. It is particularly advantageous to use this to facilitate matching with the closed-loop control in the full-load range.
- the two closed-loop controls can become comparable by the consideration of this power in corresponding manipulated variables or control variables.
- the outer cascade has for determining the first acceleration setpoint value at least one acceleration limit value. If an acceleration power is considered for the acceleration, corresponding power limit values may be provided. As a result, the speed control can be kept within relevant limits. In particular, it is achievable that it can be taken into account how much power is available at all for the implementation of the speed control. This advantage is not only achievable when an acceleration power is considered for the acceleration. Both the power available from the wind and the generator power that can be set may also be taken into account as available power.
- the at least one acceleration limit value is settable. As a result, it can be adapted to the circumstances explained.
- an upper acceleration limit value and a lower acceleration limit value with different values are provided as the at least one acceleration limit value.
- available power for increasing the rotational speed may be of a different magnitude than power for reducing the rotational speed.
- the inner cascade has for determining the manipulated variable for setting the generator state variable an integral element with an integrator limitation.
- an integrator limitation is settable and also or alternatively different upper and lower limit values are provided for the integrator limitation.
- the at least one presettable speed range is respectively provided as a speed avoidance range, which is characterized by a lower avoidance speed and an upper avoidance speed. It is provided in this respect that the speed-power control is used if the lower avoidance speed is reached when there is increasing rotational speed or the upper avoidance speed is reached when there is decreasing rotational speed. It is particularly provided that such an avoidance speed range is formed around a rotational speed that forms a resonant frequency or contributes to exciting a resonance in the wind power installation.
- the wind power installation when using the speed-power control, can, in dependence on a prevailing wind speed, be operated in a lower speed range, which includes the lower avoidance speed, at a lower operating point, and in an upper speed range, which includes the upper avoidance speed, at an upper operating point, and changing between the lower operating point and the upper operating point is carried out in dependence on an aerodynamic evaluation of the lower operating point and upper operating point.
- This aspect is therefore based on the idea that, when using the speed-power control, the wind power installation can be operated at one of these two operating points, to be specific essentially below or above the resonance situation to be avoided, to express it in illustrative terms. If the wind speed then changes, a change from the upper operating point to the lower operating point, or vice versa, may come into consideration. For such a change, it is proposed to carry out an aerodynamic evaluation of the lower operating point and upper operating point.
- an at least two-stage check is performed.
- a first stage it is checked whether the operating point to which it is intended to change has a higher aerodynamic efficiency than the operating point from which it is intended to change.
- a second stage it is checked whether the generator state variable that is determined by the closed-loop partial-load speed control reaches an upper or lower generator state limit.
- a generator state limit may be in particular a preset maximum power value. If the generator power reaches this value, that is to say the generator power rises to this value during operation at the lower operating point, that leads to changing from the lower operating point to the upper operating point.
- a lower power value may be preset, leading to a change from the upper operating point to the lower operating point if the generator power falls to this lower power limit.
- a change is allowed, and, dependent on the check in the second stage, a change is prescribed. If, therefore, the operating point at the time is less favorable than the other operating point, that is to say it has a lower aerodynamic efficiency than the operating point to which it is intended to change, a change comes into consideration. However, the change does not then have to be carried out, and it may rather be that it depends on other conditions. Such another condition may be for example how much the wind fluctuates. If it is fluctuating greatly, a change between the operating points is made more cautiously. If, however, the wind speed is scarcely fluctuating, it is more likely to be appropriate to change to the operating point with the higher aerodynamic efficiency, since it can be assumed that it will also remain the operating point with the higher aerodynamic efficiency for a time.
- an operating point with a higher aerodynamic efficiency promises a greater yield. This may, however, be compared with the loss of yield due to the change, and it may then additionally be taken into account whether or not frequent changing is to be expected.
- the predeterminable checking time period lies in a range from 5 seconds to 10 minutes, in particular in the range from 10 seconds to 5 minutes. These time periods have a lower value which may be suitable for checking sufficiently long whether the operating points or the wind conditions on which they are based are stable. Both of the upper values of 5 minutes and 10 minutes indicate a time in which losses due to change no longer predominant. The specific choice may depend particularly on how much the two operating points differ. This in turn may depend on how great the speed avoidance range must be chosen to be.
- the speed setpoint value is preset as a constant or is preset by way of at least one speed characteristic, the speed characteristic having in each case speed values in dependence on the generator state variable to be set.
- the speed characteristic is formed such that it at least partly has a negative slope, so that, with increasing values of the generator state variable, the speed values decrease.
- a negative slope can even have advantages over the vertical slope.
- a negative slope is consequently a scenario in which, when there is increasing wind speed, the rotational speed does not increase due to the speed-power control, and even decreases to some extent, whereas the generator power as the manipulated variable increases considerably. For example, here the generator power may increase by 10%, whereas the rotational speed decreases again by 1%.
- closed-loop control it can be avoided that a non-unique speed-power branch occurs in the speed-power representation. In other words, as a result, each rotational speed on this branch can be assigned a unique power value.
- a change time is preset, preferably less than 20 seconds, in particular less than 10 seconds. It is also or alternatively proposed that a progression over time is preset for the generator state variable to be set, in order in this way to control the change.
- the speed-power control By the speed-power control, the wind power installation is operated and kept at an operating point, therefore at an approximately predetermined rotational speed.
- the generator power is correspondingly set as the generator state variable and continually readjusted. All of this may of course also be carried out with the aid of the generator torque as the generator state variable.
- this generator state variable which therefore forms the manipulated variable of the speed-power control, is lowered.
- the rotor can accelerate.
- the change time can therefore be realized in this way.
- boundary conditions When choosing the change time, preferably boundary conditions must also be taken into account, so that a change as quick as however desired does not have to be the only appropriate objective.
- Limit values must also be taken into account. In particular, it must be taken into account what value must be expected for the generator state variable after the change. Thus, for example, the value of the generator state variable to be expected after the change could also be set for the changing process. After the change, this operating point with the associated generator state variable is then directly adopted.
- the generator state variable when there is a change from the lower operating point to the upper operating point, the generator state variable would have to be set correspondingly lower. If it is set too low to change too quickly, an overshoot could be caused by the generator state variable not reaching the desired value quickly enough when the desired rotational speed is reached after the change. It is correspondingly proposed to preset a change time, and the generator state variable to be set can for example be determined in a simulation, or from empirical values or specific tests.
- Such a progression over time may particularly take the form that the generator state variable continuously falls for a specific time, in particular for half the change time, and continuously rises for the remaining time, to be specific in particular to the value that has been determined as appropriate for the adopted upper operating point, for example calculated or determined by a simulation.
- the generator state variable would correspondingly first rise and then fall when it is intended to change from the upper operating point to the lower operating point.
- the transitional range in the partial-load range lies in an upper speed range that is characterized by rotational speeds from a transitional speed.
- the upper speed range lies in particular above the speed avoidance range, if such a range exists.
- the wind power installation is characterized by a rated speed and the transitional speed is at least 80%, in particular at least 85%, of the rated speed and/or of a setpoint speed of the pitch control.
- the speed-power control in this transitional range, and consequently to use the speed-power control for such high rotational speeds of 80% or 85% of the rated speed up to the full-load range, that is to say up to 100% of the rated speed.
- the pitch control if it is active, attempts to control the speed to the setpoint speed, to be specific by means of pitch adjustment.
- This setpoint speed corresponds substantially to the rated speed, but it may possibly be better taken into account in the specific implementation, particularly in the controlling structure.
- the following explanations of the rated speed similarly apply analogously to the setpoint speed.
- a speed control therefore takes place, but differs from the speed control in the full-load range to be specific because it uses the generator state variable, that is to say the generator power or the generator torque, as a manipulated variable.
- the proposed cascade control additionally allows the rotor acceleration, and consequently the dynamic response, also to be taken into account here. Particularly this is not possible by the use of the operating-characteristic control, since the operating-characteristic control merely sets the generator state variable, that is to say the generator power or the generator torque, for a detected rotational speed. No account is taken of how quickly the rotational speed changes here. For low rotational speeds, which moreover are usually also based on low wind speeds with lower fluctuations, this may be a good, tried-and-tested strategy. In the steep range described, in which moreover stronger wind fluctuations are also to be expected, an improvement can however be achieved by the use of the speed-power control.
- the speed setpoint value is preset by way of a transitional speed characteristic, which forms the or a speed characteristic, the transitional speed characteristic running vertically for a rotational speed with a speed value in correspondence with the transitional speed, so that with an increasing generator state variable the rotational speed is constant until the generator state variable reaches a predetermined first generator reference value, which lies below a rated value of the generator state variable.
- the rated speed to be specific from which full-load operation begins, and consequently the corresponding closed-loop control, is not reached too early.
- the rotational speed can often reach the rated speed due to wind fluctuations. It must then be checked how to respond to this, to be specific whether this activates the speed control that is provided for full-load operation. It could give rise to a frequent change between operating-characteristic control and pitch control, which is avoided by the solution proposed here.
- the transitional speed characteristic still has a positive slope and/or that, from the first generator reference value, it has a positive slope, so that the values of the generator state variable increase with increasing rotational speed until a rated value of the generator state variable has been reached.
- Designing the transitional speed characteristic such that it has a positive slope from the transitional speed and reaches up to the rated speed is not the preferred solution, but may be provided.
- the transitional speed characteristic differs in that range from the operating characteristic. In particular, it may be linear, and consequently lie above the operating characteristic in this range.
- the rotational speed is then controlled along this transitional speed characteristic, to be specific with the proposed closed-loop speed-power controller.
- the transitional speed characteristic runs vertically until the generator reference value is reached, the transitional speed characteristic having a positive slope from there. However, it preferably reaches a rated value of the generator state variable, that is to say a rated power or a rated torque, before the rotational speed has reached the rated speed. As a result, this rated value of the generator state variable is then already reached in the partial-load range and only then is the rotational speed increased up to the rated speed, in order then or thereby to go over into the full-load range and the corresponding closed-loop control in the full-load range.
- a rated value of the generator state variable that is to say a rated power or a rated torque
- a control reserve is determined in dependence on a difference between the set generator state variable and the upper generator state limit.
- the difference may also form the control reserve directly. That particularly depends on whether the generator state variable has the same physical unit as the control reserve.
- the control reserve may particularly be formed as power. If the generator state variable is formed as torque, a conversion of a corresponding difference of the torques into this control reserve comes into consideration. It is particularly advantageous if, in the inner cascade, the first acceleration setpoint value and the detected acceleration actual value are provided with the same unit as the control reserve.
- control reserve is transferred from the speed-power control to the pitch control.
- the pitch control is a speed control in which the blade angle forms the manipulated variable.
- the speed-power control and the pitch control provide two closed-loop speed controls, which can hereby be coordinated with one another.
- control reserve is in this case an indicator of how much adjustment power or adjustment energy the speed-power control still has available at all. If it has a lot of adjustment energy available, the control reserve is large in absolute terms. As a result, it can be signaled to the pitch control that the speed-power control is also not yet at its limits and can still control.
- the pitch control thereby not only receives information as to whether the speed-power control still has adjustment energy, but it also receives information concerning the level. As a result, the transition can take place continuously. If there is still a lot of adjustment energy available, the control reserve is therefore still large in absolute terms, the pitch control can still remain inactive. If, however, the control reserve is small, but nevertheless still exists, the pitch control may have already become active, while the speed-power control is also still active. Then, both speed controls are active and they are coordinated with one another by way of the control reserve.
- a switchover may also be provided, but, at least due to account being taken of the control reserve, it can be carried out in relation to a state that is as suitable as possible or a situation that is as suitable as possible.
- the speed-power control is prioritized over the pitch control, in particular such that the pitch control is entirely or partially suppressed as long as the speed-power control does not reach a manipulated-variable restriction.
- the speed-power control is then given preference.
- the pitch control additionally controls the rotational speed in dependence on an acceleration actual value of the rotor and control of the rotational speed by the pitch control is suppressed all the more the further the generator setpoint value lies below a generator setpoint value limit in the speed-power control. It is therefore proposed to fully or partially use the speed-power control as long as it can also be effective. This has already been explained above. It may also be checked whether or not the speed-power control reaches a manipulated-variable restriction. If it reaches the manipulated-variable restriction, the pitch control may be activated or increased in its proportion.
- the pitch control may additionally control the rotational speed in dependence on an acceleration actual value of the rotor. It can in this way particularly be detected whether and how much an excessive rotational speed must be expected shortly, which the pitch control should then counteract. This counteraction may be additionally made dependent on the extent to which the speed-power control is still capable of counteracting it.
- the generator setpoint value consequently forms a manipulated variable which can act directly or indirectly on the generator. How far this manipulated variable is away from a limit, to be specific the generator setpoint limit, is taken into account here, in order correspondingly to include the pitch control more or less. If the generator setpoint value is still far away from the generator setpoint value limit, the pitch control can be greatly suppressed. If the generator setpoint value approaches the generator setpoint value limit, the pitch control can be correspondingly added to a greater extent to the control. This can be used for determining the control reserve and in this way be sent to the pitch control.
- the speed-power control uses the generator state variable as a manipulated variable for controlling the rotational speed, and this is consequently referred to as the generator manipulated variable
- the pitch control uses the blade angle as a manipulated variable for controlling the rotational speed, and this is consequently referred to as the pitch manipulated variable
- the blade angles being increased, in particular with increasing wind speed, in each case from a partial-load blade angle, which is set in the partial-load range, toward an end angle
- the speed-power control being coordinated with the pitch control, and in particular the generator manipulated variable and the pitch manipulated variable being coordinated with one another for coordinating the speed-power control with the pitch control.
- Such coordination may particularly take the form that the manipulated variable that is used in one controller is subtracted in the case of the other controller, possibly with corresponding conversion of the relevant units.
- the two controllers are coordinated with one another such that the value of the manipulated variable of the one controller can be subtracted directly in the case of the other controller.
- the two manipulated variables would have to be coordinated with one another, for example by normalizing.
- the two controllers can carry out speed control without one compensating for the other or leading to over-control, in which the manipulated variables of the two controllers are in fact added in an uncoordinated manner.
- the manipulated-variable restriction of the generator manipulated variable is taken into account and the speed-power control and the pitch control are coordinated such that, as long as it does not reach the manipulated-variable restriction, the speed-power control has a greater influence on the rotational speed than the pitch control.
- the speed-power control therefore proceeds as long as it can sufficiently implement a manipulated variable.
- the pitch manipulated variable is set in dependence on the manipulated-variable restriction of the generator manipulated variable.
- a difference between the generator manipulated variable and the manipulated-variable restriction defines an adjustment range of the speed-power control and the pitch manipulated variable is changed such that the pitch control has all the smaller influence on the rotational speed the greater the adjustment range of the speed-power control.
- this adjustment range can be ascertained and taken into account in the coordination in an easy way.
- the pitch control takes place such that, in an outer cascade, a second acceleration setpoint value is determined from a comparison of a preset setpoint speed with a detected actual speed by way of a third closed-loop controller, in an inner cascade, a manipulated variable, in particular the pitch manipulated variable, for adjusting the blade angle is determined from a comparison of the second acceleration setpoint value with a detected acceleration setpoint value by way of a fourth closed-loop controller, and that the comparison of the second acceleration setpoint value with the detected acceleration value forms a control error and the control error is modified by means of the control reserve, and the thus-modified control error forms an input variable of the fourth controller.
- the fourth controller is therefore the controller of the inner cascade of the pitch control.
- This inner cascade takes into account an acceleration setpoint/actual-value comparison. It therefore takes into account whether the detected acceleration of the rotor corresponds to the desired acceleration of the rotor. If that is not the case, this produces a difference, which can be referred to as the control error. This then leads through the fourth controller to a corresponding reaction, to be specific the adjusting of the blade angles. The deviation between desired acceleration and detected acceleration is thereby counteracted.
- this control error which indicates the acceleration deviation
- this control error of the inner cascade of the pitch control need not be corrected by a pitch control if the speed-power control can instead achieve this by way of the generator.
- the speed-power control can achieve it by way of the generator whenever there is a corresponding control reserve.
- this control reserve is dimensioned to be made to match the acceleration deviation in the pitch control. The control reserve is then simply subtracted from this acceleration control error in the pitch control. In the extreme case when the speed-power control has a sufficient control reserve, this then produces the value zero and the pitch control can be inactive.
- the pitch control can also be coordinated with the speed-power control, to be specific in such a way that it takes into account how well or how much the speed-power control can still act at all.
- the control reserve is there for this.
- the acceleration setpoint value, the acceleration actual value and the resulting control error of the inner cascade of the pitch control are respectively formed as power values.
- coordination with the speed-power control is simplified.
- the modification takes place in particular such that the adjusting of the blade angle is reduced in comparison with if the control error is not modified, or that the adjusting of the blade angle is suppressed.
- the modification takes place in particular such that the control reserve or a variable equivalent to it, in particular proportional to it, is effectively fed forward to the comparison of the second acceleration setpoint value with the detected acceleration value.
- the acceleration power therefore indicates the power that is required to achieve the corresponding acceleration.
- the control reserve may form a power value which to be specific indicates how much control power the speed-power control still has available. Precisely this power value is then subtracted from the acceleration control error of the pitch control, which to be specific is then likewise a power.
- the first acceleration setpoint value which is determined in dependence on a comparison of the preset setpoint speed with a detected actual speed, is additionally changed in dependence on a blade angle. This takes place in particular such that the first acceleration setpoint value is increased by a feedforwarding value, the feedforwarding value being determined in dependence on a differential angle as the difference between the blade angle at the time and the partial-load blade angle, in particular is determined proportionally thereto.
- This increasing of the acceleration setpoint value has the consequence that the speed-power control attempts to correct this increased acceleration setpoint value, therefore attempts to reach this acceleration setpoint value by corresponding setting of the generator state variable, that is to say the generator power or the generator torque.
- the speed-power control may then however reach a limitation. This may also be referred to as it reaching saturation. This may then in turn mean that a smaller control reserve or no control reserve at all is detected.
- This control reserve or correspondingly smaller control reserve or non-existent control reserve may in a corresponding implementation have an effect on the pitch control and thereby activate it or increase its influence, possibly up to 100%, so that the speed-power control then no longer acts.
- the closed-loop speed-power control can be cut back in an easy way when the pitch control is active.
- a displacement of the characteristic curve is carried out, in which the operating characteristic is displaced in dependence on an operating point, in particular in dependence on a behavior of a pitch control, in particular in dependence on a set blade angle, such that, with the same rotational speed, a higher value of the generator state variable is set.
- the operating characteristic is consequently displaced to the left.
- the operating characteristic is intended for controlling the wind power installation in the partial-load range, but during the transition to the full-load range and when there is gusty wind the pitch control can respond, while the operating-characteristic control is likewise active. At such an operating point, the displacement of the operating characteristic is provided.
- the wind speed can fluctuate rapidly about an average wind speed.
- the pitch control is often not capable of correcting the rapid fluctuations, so that fluctuations in the rotational speed can result.
- the rotational speed may also fall below the rated speed, which may lead to a reaction of the operating-characteristic control, which to be specific reduces the power as the rotational speed falls. Since the operating characteristic is particularly steep for high rotational speeds, even small changes in speed can lead to great changes in power. If the rotational speed falls below the rated speed, that can lead to great reductions of the power, to be specific to values below the rated power, although the average rotational speed does not have to lie below the rated speed at all.
- the operating characteristic is displaced by a predetermined or settable displacement speed, which lies in particular in a range from 0.3 to 1.5 rotations per minute (rpm), preferably in a range from 0.5 to 1 rpm.
- a predetermined or settable displacement speed which lies in particular in a range from 0.3 to 1.5 rotations per minute (rpm), preferably in a range from 0.5 to 1 rpm.
- the displacement of the characteristic curve is carried out in dependence on an exceedance of the partial-load blade angle, in particular in dependence on an exceedance value by which the blade angle exceeds the partial-load angle.
- the pitch control has not yet become active. If it is exceeded, it has become active and a displacement of the characteristic curve comes into consideration.
- the displacement of the characteristic curve is made dependent on an exceedance value.
- the displacement of the characteristic curve is particularly only carried out whenever the exceedances value reaches an exceedance minimum value, which in particular lies in the range from 2° to 5°.
- the exceedance value is quantitatively evaluated, and the displacement speed is set dependent on the exceedance value.
- the exceedance value consequently makes an evaluation of the gustiness possible and, dependent on it, the displacement speed can be correspondingly chosen, to be specific all the greater the greater the exceedance value is.
- a wind power installation has an aerodynamic rotor, which is operated with variable rotational speed and which has rotor blades that are adjustable in their blade angle.
- the wind power installation also has an open-loop control device for controlling the wind power installation.
- the open-loop control device is prepared to control the wind power installation by means of a method for controlling the wind power installation according to at least one of the embodiments described above.
- the open-loop control device may have at least one process computer on which the method is implemented.
- one or more operating characteristics are stored for this and an operating-characteristic control is implemented, taking in dependence on the detected rotational speed a corresponding generator state variable from the relevant operating characteristic and correspondingly setting the wind power installation.
- the open-loop control device particularly has access to the generator of the wind power installation and can set its power output and/or its generator torque.
- the open-loop control device also has access to adjusting devices for adjusting the blade angles of the rotor blades.
- Also implemented in the open-loop control device is a speed-power control and this can receive actual values and likewise activate the generator and the blade adjusting device.
- the speed-power control is implemented such that it can receive both a speed actual value and a speed setpoint value and that it can also receive an acceleration actual value or can calculate it from a received speed.
- wind power installations are formed as wind power installations according to at least one embodiment described above.
- a number of the wind power installations or even all of the wind power installations of the wind farm use at least one method described above for controlling the wind power installation, their operation can be coordinated with one another.
- any oscillating behaviors of the wind power installations can also make the wind power installations affect one another.
- better suppression of such oscillations as a result of the proposed methods and more stable behavior of the wind power installations as a result of at least one of the methods proposed above lead to favorable overall behavior of the wind farm.
- a wind farm is an arrangement of wind power installations that feed into the electricity supply grid via the same grid connection point. The proposed methods also allow this feeding in to take place more uniformly and with fewer oscillations.
- FIG. 1 shows a wind power installation in a perspective representation.
- FIG. 2 shows a wind farm in a schematic representation.
- FIG. 3 shows a speed-power control and a pitch control respectively in a simplified schematic representation.
- FIG. 4 shows a speed-power diagram to illustrate the proposed control method.
- FIG. 5 shows a time-power diagram to illustrate a transition between an upper operating point and a lower operating point.
- FIG. 6 shows a speed-power control in an extended structure compared to FIG. 3 .
- FIG. 1 shows a schematic representation of a wind power installation.
- the wind power installation 100 has a tower 102 and a nacelle 104 on the tower 102 .
- an aerodynamic rotor 106 with three rotor blades 108 and a spinner 110 .
- the aerodynamic rotor 106 is set in a rotary motion by the wind, and thereby also turns an electrodynamic rotor of a generator that is directly or indirectly coupled to the aerodynamic rotor 106 .
- the electrical generator is arranged in the nacelle 104 and generates electrical energy.
- the pitch angles of the rotor blades 108 can be adjusted by pitch motors at the rotor blade roots 108 b of the respective rotor blades 108 .
- the wind power installation 100 has in this case an electrical generator 101 , which is indicated in the nacelle 104 .
- an electrical generator 101 By means of the generator 101 , electrical power can be generated.
- a feeding-in unit 105 is provided, which may particularly be formed as an inverter. Consequently, a three-phase feed-in current and/or a three-phase feed-in voltage with respect to amplitude, frequency and phase can be generated, for feeding in at a grid connection point PCC. This may take place directly or together with further wind power installations in a wind farm.
- an open-loop installation controller 103 is provided for controlling the wind power installation 100 and also the feeding-in unit 105 .
- the installation controller 103 may also receive preset default values from outside, in particular from a central farm computer.
- FIG. 2 shows a wind farm 112 with, by way of example, three wind power installations 100 , which may be the same or different.
- the three wind power installations 100 are consequently representative of essentially any number of wind power installations of a wind farm 112 .
- the wind power installations 100 provide their power, to be specific in particular the electricity generated, by way of an electrical farm grid 114 .
- the electricity or power respectively generated by the individual wind power installations 100 is added together and there is usually a transformer 116 , which steps up the voltage in the farm in order then to feed into the supply grid 120 at the feed-in point 118 , which is also referred to generally as the PCC.
- FIG. 2 is just a simplified representation of a wind farm 112 , which for example does not show any controller, although there is of course a controller. It is also possible for example for the farm grid 114 to be differently designed, in that for example there is also a transformer at the output of each wind power installation 100 , to name just one other exemplary embodiment.
- the wind farm 112 also has a central farm computer 122 . This may be connected to the wind power installations 100 by way of data lines 124 , or wirelessly, in order thereby to exchange data with the wind power installations and in particular to receive measured values from the wind power installations 100 and transmit control values to the wind power installations 100 .
- FIG. 3 shows a simplified controlling structure (e.g., control system) 300 . It has in its upper part a speed-power control 302 . In the lower part, it has a pitch control 304 . The speed-power control 302 and the pitch control 304 may be coupled by way of a coupling connection 306 , which is represented by dashed lines and is further explained below. In principle, however, both closed-loop controllers can operate independently of one another, so that the coupling connection 306 is only represented by dashed lines. It is provided at least according to one embodiment.
- the speed-power control 302 has a first summing point 308 , at which a setpoint/actual-value comparison between the setpoint speed ns and the actual speed n i is carried out.
- the resulting control error e n is entered into the first controller 310 .
- the actual speed n i is detected at the wind power installation and fed back via an outer feedback 312 and is sent to the first summing point 308 .
- the first summing point 308 , the first controller 310 and the outer feedback 312 may be regarded as essential component parts of an outer cascade of the speed-power controller.
- the first controller 310 determines on the basis of the control error e n a first acceleration setpoint value as. This is subtracted from an acceleration actual value a i at the second summing point 314 , so that the inner control error e a is obtained. Consequently, a setpoint/actual-value comparison with a negative sign takes place at the second summing point. It is essentially only a question of nomenclature and should, in illustrative terms, be attributed to the fact that, in the case of a generator, a generator torque with a braking effect, therefore counteracting an acceleration, is controlled. That is the reason for the chosen signs at the second summing point 314 .
- the resulting inner control error e a is sent to the second controller 316 , which determines from it a generator setpoint value, which may be formed as a generator setpoint torque or, as in the variant shown in FIG. 3 , as a power setpoint value P s .
- the acceleration actual value a i is fed back to the second summing point 314 by an inner feedback 318 .
- the second summing point 314 , the second controller 316 and the inner feedback 318 may be regarded as essential elements of the inner cascade of the speed-power controller 302 .
- the acceleration values considered are preferably taken into account as power values.
- an acceleration power which is used as a value of the corresponding acceleration value, describes how much power has to be used up to achieve the corresponding acceleration, or how much power would be output by corresponding braking.
- the power setpoint value P s thus determined is entered into the generator 320 and that has an effect on the wind power installation illustrated in the wind power installation block 322 .
- the representation of the generator 320 as a block of its own serves substantially for purposes of illustration. In fact, the generator 320 is of course part of the wind power installation. Particularly, however, it is intended that this should illustrate the delimitation of the pitch control 304 .
- the closed-loop speed-power control 302 shown is provided. If this is activated, it consequently receives a corresponding speed setpoint value. That may be fixed or part of a special characteristic curve.
- the first controller 310 has the effect that the outer control error then leads to an acceleration setpoint value as.
- This acceleration setpoint value is not however converted into a generator power or a generator torque directly, but instead it is first checked how great a difference there is at all from an existing acceleration value.
- This produces the inner control error e a from which then the power setpoint value P s is determined by means of the second controller 316 and is sent to the generator 320 .
- the acceleration of the rotor is correspondingly changed and as a result the rotational speed is corrected to the preset rotational speed.
- this speed-power control 302 is used.
- the rotational speed is thereby controlled and this also results in a corresponding output power of the generator, which is not only used for closed-loop control but is also output as power generated from the wind.
- This speed-power control may be provided independently of the pitch control 304 , particularly whenever this speed-power control 302 is used to control an upper or lower avoidance speed in a speed avoidance range.
- the speed-power control 302 manages without linking up with the pitch control 304 , which to be specific is in that case still inactive.
- the pitch control 304 is constructed similarly to the speed-power control 302 .
- the pitch control 304 also has an outer cascade, which has a third summing point 324 , at which a setpoint/actual-value comparison of the rotational speeds is carried out in order to produce an outer control error e n and send it to the third controller 326 .
- An outer feedback 328 is also provided for the actual speed n i .
- the third controller 326 then produces an acceleration setpoint value as, which is compared with the actual acceleration a i at the fourth summing point 330 .
- the actual acceleration a i is in this case fed by way of the inner feedback 332 to the fourth summing point 330 .
- An inner control error e a is obtained.
- the fifth summing point 334 may be inactive and is only required for the coordination of the speed-power control 302 and the pitch control 304 . If this fifth summing point 334 is inactive, the inner control error e a is sent directly to the fourth controller 336 . To this extent, the structure still corresponds, at least essentially, to the speed-power control 302 , for which reason some designations are also chosen to be identical.
- the fourth controller 336 then produces a setpoint value for the blade angles ⁇ s , which is correspondingly sent to a pitch system 338 .
- the blades are therefore adjusted by means of the pitch system 338 such that the acceleration actual value is adjusted to the acceleration setpoint value, in order thereby also to achieve an adjustment of the actual speed to the setpoint speed.
- the pitch system acts on the wind power installation block 340 , which could correspond to the wind power installation block 322 .
- the pitch system 338 is of course part of the wind power installation and moreover the entire closed-loop control may also be regarded as part of the wind power installation.
- the wind power installation block 340 serves for purposes of illustration, to be specific that the pitch system 338 acts on the wind power installation. Consequently, the pitch control acts on the wind power installation by presetting the setpoint angle as.
- the speed-power control 302 uses a generator power or a generator torque as a manipulated variable
- the pitch control 304 uses a blade adjustment as a manipulated variable. This is of course also taken into account in the corresponding closed-loop controllers, in particular in the second and fourth controllers 316 , 336 .
- the two structures are however chosen similarly to the extent that the setpoint/actual-value comparison in the second summing element 314 and in the fourth summing element 330 can be the same to the extent that they can be based on the same physical unit for the acceleration. It is particularly proposed that in both cases the acceleration values are regarded as powers. As a result, coupling or coordination of the speed-power control 302 with the pitch control 304 becomes possible.
- the second controller 316 determines for this a control reserve P R and outputs it.
- the control reserve P R indicates how much power is available to the speed-power control 302 for closed-loop control. If, for example, the wind power installation is already outputting maximum power, the reserve power would be zero, to give an extreme case. At the fifth summing point 334 there would then be the value zero, that is to say the pitch control changes nothing at all. The pitch control would then quite normally adjust the rotor blades appropriately out of the wind to reduce the rotor acceleration.
- the speed-power control 302 would not be able to bring about any change because its manipulated variable, to be specific the generator power (which could also be the generator torque), is already at a limit, which may also be referred to as saturation. In this case, in fact only the pitch control 304 would still be active, and would be 100% active, whereas the speed-power control 302 would no longer be active. However, that could quickly change again, for example when the wind drops.
- This inner control error e a is consequently the rotor acceleration that remains after the setpoint/actual-value comparison and would have to be corrected. For this purpose, it is entered into the fourth controller 336 . If, however, the speed-power control 302 still has sufficient control reserve available, this is subtracted from the acceleration to be corrected. In extreme case, this may mean that it is subtracted down to zero. In this extreme case, only the speed-power control 302 would be active, but the pitch control 304 would not.
- the control reserve P R is much greater than the output of the fourth summing point 330 .
- the output of the fifth summing point 334 would then become negative. On account of limitations, this would nevertheless not lead to a blade angle or blade angle adjustment in the other direction.
- the speed-power control 302 and the pitch control 304 may operate in an overlapping manner, in particular in the transitional range from the partial-load range to the full-load range. Right at the beginning of the full-load range, the rotor blades are however still optimally in the wind. The pitch control can then only turn the rotor blades in one direction. A negative output value at the fifth summing point 334 would in that case not lead to any effect. On the other hand, if the rotor blades had however already been turned somewhat out of the wind, a negative output value at the fifth summing point 334 would have the effect that the blades are again turned fully into the wind.
- FIG. 4 shows a speed-power diagram, in which the generator power P is plotted against the rotational speed n of the rotor. Shown here, beginning with the starting speed no, is a speed-power characteristic, which rises in a strictly monotonously increasing manner until reaching the rated speed n N with rated power P N and forms an operating characteristic 402 . This operating characteristic is interrupted in a speed avoidance range 404 , which is indicated there by the dotted line. It is also proposed likewise not to use the operating characteristic for controlling the wind power installation in an upper speed range 406 , so that there it is only represented by dashed lines.
- the speed avoidance range 404 essentially includes a point of resonance. At this point of resonance, a resonant frequency of the wind power installation may be excited by the plotted resonance speed n R . Therefore, as far as possible, the wind power installation should not be operated at this speed.
- a speed-power control is switched on, as it is shown as speed-power control 302 in FIG. 3 .
- the coupling connection 306 is not relevant here and can either be omitted or does not have any effect. If then the wind speed increases further, this would lead to an increase of the rotational speed, but would then be counteracted by the speed-power control. It operates as explained in connection with FIG. 3 , with the lower avoidance speed n 1 able to be entered as the setpoint speed ns, then therefore sent to the first summing point 308 .
- the power increases, in order thereby to counteract the acceleration of the rotor.
- This can be realized particularly well by the proposed cascade control, which determines an acceleration setpoint value in the outer cascade and corrects it in the inner cascade. This produces the left branch 408 shown. The greater the wind speed then becomes, the higher this vertical branch 408 rises up.
- Changing from the left branch to the right branch, or vice versa when the wind speed is falling may depend on limit values. It is particularly proposed that a change is made from the left branch 408 to the right branch 410 if the generator state variable, here therefore the power P, has reached an upper limit value. Conversely, changing may be envisaged, particularly when wind speeds are falling, if the installation is being operated with an operating point on the right branch 410 and reaches a lower power limit. It may particularly be envisaged that a change must therefore be made if the upper limit is reached on the left branch or the lower limit is reached on the right branch.
- an aerodynamic efficiency of the operating point at the time may be determined. This particularly depends on the tip speed ratio, that is to say on the quotient of a blade tip speed divided by the wind speed at the time. In the partial-load range, the wind power installation is usually designed such that the tip speed ratio is as far as possible ideal. This design usually leads to the operating characteristic used, here therefore the operating characteristic 402 . If the operating point lies on this operating characteristic 402 , it is aerodynamically optimum. An optimum aerodynamic efficiency is therefore obtained.
- the rotational speed is kept for example at the lower avoidance speed n 1 , the power increasing according to the left branch 408 , a departure is made from this operating characteristic 402 , and consequently also from aerodynamically optimum operation.
- the aerodynamic efficiency therefore drops. It can also be calculated, since a characteristic diagram of the wind power installation, and consequently the efficiencies of various operating points of a wind power installation, is/are usually well known. The efficiency can be derived from the speed detected and the power generated and this can also be used to derive the wind speed, by way of the known characteristic diagram.
- the wind speed has been derived, it can also be calculated which operating point the wind power installation would adopt after a change to the right branch 410 .
- This can also be carried out by using the known characteristic diagram, from which the aerodynamic efficiency can then be calculated, and consequently the aerodynamic efficiencies of the operating point at the time, that is to say according to the example given on the left branch 408 , can be compared with the efficiency of the operating point on the right branch 410 , which the wind power installation would adopt after a change. If the efficiency of the operating point that has been calculated for after a change is higher than the aerodynamic efficiency at the time, a change comes into consideration. However, the change does not have to be carried out immediately, if for example, to keep with the above example, the difference between the two efficiencies is small and it is not yet foreseeable whether the wind speed will increase further.
- the method may be applied analogously for changing from the right branch 410 to the left branch 408 .
- FIG. 5 is an illustration of a change on the basis of an example in which the wind speed is falling, and consequently the power P that can be generated is falling. This is schematically illustrated by the strictly monotonously falling dashed line. It is assumed that, at the point in time t 1 , the upper avoidance speed n 2 is reached, coming from above. Then the speed-power control commences and attempts to keep the speed at the upper avoidance speed n 2 . That leads to the power decreasing, which is indicated by the power control branch 550 . The dashed power progression 552 consequently lies above the power control branch 550 . As a result, less power is converted, whereby the rotor is braked less or is no longer braked. The rotational speed can be maintained.
- the power control branch 550 which however does not by any means have to run linearly, corresponds to the right branch 410 of FIG. 4 .
- the power decrease is however shown against the rotational speed n, so that the right branch runs vertically.
- the progression of the power control branch 550 is however shown against time, so that it does not run vertically.
- a further upper branch 556 and a falling branch 558 form together with the rising branch 554 a progression over time for the generator state variable to be set, to be specific here the power to be set.
- the change has been completed, so that the operating point is then on the left branch 408 but is at the foot of the left branch 408 , since in the representation of FIG. 5 the falling branch 558 ends on the dashed power progression 552 .
- the power that can be generated as an optimum is then therefore output, so that therefore the optimum operating point has been set, once again lying on the operating characteristic.
- the optimum operating point which may also be referred to synonymously as the working point, does not have to be achieved when making a change.
- the differential time between the starting point in time t 2 and the post-change point in time t 3 may be referred to as the change time T w and preset.
- the distance between the power level of the upper branch 556 and the power achieved after the change may be referred to as the change power P w .
- the rising branch 554 , the upper branch 556 and the falling branch 558 approximately form a trapezoid and, for simplicity, the product of the change time T w and the change power P w can be used for calculating the change energy.
- the time that one of the two flanks needs is subtracted as the change time T w .
- FIG. 4 the use of a closed-loop speed-power control for the upper speed range 406 is also explained. It is accordingly envisaged that, from the transitional speed n 3 , the speed-power control is used, as it is explained in FIG. 3 . Particularly, here, too, the coupling between the speed-power control 302 and the pitch control 304 by means of the coupling connection 306 may be provided.
- the speed-power control receives as a speed setpoint value a speed according to a transitional speed characteristic.
- a transitional speed characteristic 412 has a vertical branch 414 and a residual branch 416 , which adjoins the vertical branch 414 .
- the residual branch 416 is adjoined by a horizontal branch 418 , which has rated power P N and reaches up to the rated speed n N and may reach beyond that.
- the horizontal branch 418 may also be regarded as part of the transitional speed characteristic 412 .
- the vertical branch 414 consequently has the effect that, when the wind speed is increasing, at first the transitional speed n 3 forms the setpoint speed for the speed-power control. If in this case, with increasing wind speed, the power reaches a reference power value P ref , which lies below the rated power P N , the residual branch 416 is used.
- the residual branch 416 is intended to lead the operating point finally up to the rated power P N when the wind speed is increasing.
- the rated power P N is in this case intended to be preferably reached before the rated speed n N has been reached.
- the residual branch 416 may have a positive slope and, as shown in FIG. 4 , be formed as straight. According to the residual branch 416 , the power then increases proportionally with increasing rotational speed. However, other progressions are also conceivable, for example according to a second-order polynomial, so that the residual branch 416 may then be curved, in order thereby to achieve the rated power P N .
- such a residual branch 416 reproduces a relationship between rotational speed and power. This relationship may be used such that the operating point is identified on the basis of the output power and the associated rotational speed is then entered into the speed-power controller as the setpoint speed. As a result, the wind power installation can then also be guided along this residual branch 416 by means of the speed-power control.
- a negative slope may also be provided for the vertical branch 414 , so that the rotational speed decreases somewhat with increasing power.
- the closed-loop control of the alternative branch 420 may also take place by the power being detected and, dependent on it, the rotational speed assigned to the alternative branch 420 being used as the setpoint speed for the speed-power control.
- the speed-power control As it is explained above in FIG. 3 , no longer has a sufficient power reserve.
- the coupling connection 306 will transfer to the pitch control 304 a correspondingly small value which is taken into consideration there at the fifth summing point 334 .
- the pitch control 304 may then already become active.
- FIG. 6 shows a speed-power control corresponding to the upper part of FIG. 3 , but with further elements, partly with more details and partly in a somewhat different representation.
- the speed-power control 602 of FIG. 6 also has a first summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 608 , which essentially performs a setpoint/actual-value comparison for the rotational speed and consequently produces an outer control error e n for the speed.
- a first closed-loop controller 610 which here however has further details and is therefore only represented as a dashed block.
- the first controller 610 likewise outputs a setpoint acceleration a s .
- a setpoint/actual-value comparison takes place at the second summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 614 and that is entered into a second controller 616 .
- the latter in turn outputs a setpoint generator state variable, to be specific here a setpoint power P S .
- An outer feedback 612 and an inner feedback 618 are likewise provided.
- the function also corresponds to the way of functioning explained in relation to FIG. 3 for the speed-power control 302 .
- the setpoint power P S output from the second controller 616 is in this case sent to the wind power installation 622 , which here however includes the generator.
- the wind power installation 622 outputs a speed n and this is sent via a filter block (e.g., filter or filter circuit) 650 .
- the filter block 650 consequently outputs two filtered speeds, it being possible for the filterings to take different forms.
- the speed is converted inter alia by derivation in the acceleration block (e.g., acceleration circuit) 652 into the detected acceleration
- the acceleration block e.g., acceleration circuit
- the filter block 650 is filtered differently for the inner feedback 618 than for the outer feedback 612 .
- the first controller 610 is constructed such that the speed control error is converted in the speed converting block (e.g., speed converting circuit) 654 into a preliminary acceleration value a v . That is converted by way of an acceleration limiting block (e.g., acceleration limiting circuit) 656 into the acceleration setpoint value as.
- the provisional acceleration value a v is already provided as power.
- An equivalent blade angle power P ⁇ can be subtracted from it, to be specific at the third summing point 658 (e.g., adder/subtractor).
- the equivalent blade angle power P ⁇ is determined by the blade angle power block (e.g., blade angle power circuit) 660 .
- the difference between an existing blade angle ⁇ and a minimum blade angle ⁇ min is taken into account with the aid of the fourth summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 662 . Furthermore, information concerning the pitch control Pit_C at the time is taken into account.
- This difference between the blade angle at the time and the minimum blade angle is what particularly matters. If the blade angle ⁇ at the time corresponds to the minimum blade angle ⁇ min , the difference is zero and no account has to be taken.
- the output value of the blade angle power block 660 that is to say the equivalent blade angle power Pa, may then be zero. However, once the blade angle has been adjusted with respect to the minimum blade angle, this means that the taking of power is no longer optimal, in particular that it has been reduced, to be specific by this equivalent blade angle power value P ⁇ . That is consequently taken into account at the third summing point 658 in the first controller 610 .
- the provisional acceleration a v which to be specific is intended to lead to the setpoint acceleration a s , can consequently be reduced.
- the provisional acceleration value a v is correspondingly modified and the result is additionally sent via the acceleration limiting block 656 , so that the acceleration setpoint value as is obtained.
- the setpoint/actual-value comparison of the acceleration values then leads to the inner control error e a , which in the second controller 616 is entered into the acceleration converting block (e.g., acceleration converting circuit) 664 .
- the acceleration converting block 664 Particularly taken into account in the acceleration converting block 664 is a time constant, which can be referred to as the readjustment time.
- the result is then sent to the integrator 666 .
- the output of the integrator 666 is essentially the setpoint power P s to be determined, this initially also being sent via a power limiting block (e.g., power limiting circuit) 668 , in order to take limitations into account.
- the integrator 666 being integrated any further, although a limitation has already been reached in the power limiting block 668 , a comparison between the unlimited power and the limited power takes place at the fifth summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 670 . If the limitation in the power limiting block 668 is not reached, the result of forming the difference at the fifth summing point 670 has the value zero. If, however, the limitation is reached, the difference is fed back via the integrator limiting block 672 to the input of the integrator 666 by being subtracted from the result of the acceleration converting block 664 at the sixth summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 674 .
- the sixth summing point e.g., adder/subtractor
- a displacement of the characteristic curve is provided in the speed-power control 602 of FIG. 6 .
- the speed-power characteristic may in this case be displaced by the speed displacement value n k for the account to be taken in the speed power control.
- the speed displacement value n k is added to the speed actual value at the seventh summing point (e.g., adder/subtractor) 676 .
- the speed displacement value n k may be for example 0.3 to 1.5 rpm. This value is added to the measured or detected speed n and this has the effect that, from the viewpoint of the speed-power controller, the actual speed is somewhat greater than it actually is. That leads to the effect that the operating characteristic, that is to say the speed-power characteristic, is displaced to the left by the corresponding value of the displacement speed n k .
- the activation of the displacement and also its magnitude may in this case depend on a set blade angle, and consequently on a behavior of a pitch control, such as for example the pitch control 304 of FIG. 3 .
- the setpoint value for the blade angles ⁇ s may be used as a criterion of the displacement.
- An improvement of the power curve of a wind power installation and a circumvention of speeds can particularly be achieved, especially to avoid operation at points of resonance.
- An avoidance of loads and tonality can in this way be achieved, to give just two examples.
- a cascaded controlling structure is proposed, with an outer loop for a closed-loop speed control and an inner loop for a closed-loop acceleration control.
- an advantageous coupling to a full-load controller is made possible, to be specific in particular to the pitch control.
- Transition functions or concepts for the controlled passing through of speed avoidance regions of points of resonance, and the choice of the switching points in time for passing through the speed avoidance regions, are proposed.
- At least one segment with a non-vertical speed characteristic is proposed, in particular as a linear segment with a constant slope.
- the segment presets power-dependent speed setpoint values.
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Abstract
Description
Claims (26)
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
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| EP21152924 | 2021-01-22 | ||
| EP21152924.3 | 2021-01-22 | ||
| EP21152924.3A EP4033090B1 (en) | 2021-01-22 | 2021-01-22 | Method for controlling a wind energy system |
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| US20220235737A1 US20220235737A1 (en) | 2022-07-28 |
| US11952980B2 true US11952980B2 (en) | 2024-04-09 |
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| EP4033090B1 (en) * | 2021-01-22 | 2024-08-28 | Wobben Properties GmbH | Method for controlling a wind energy system |
| EP4092264A1 (en) * | 2021-05-19 | 2022-11-23 | Wobben Properties GmbH | Method for operating a wind turbine, wind turbine, and wind farm |
| CN116896296B (en) * | 2023-09-07 | 2023-12-01 | 福建华电福瑞能源发展有限公司 | Method and system for controlling power of wind generating set at cut-out wind speed |
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| US20220235737A1 (en) * | 2021-01-22 | 2022-07-28 | Wobben Properties Gmbh | Method for controlling a wind power installation |
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| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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| CN103615356B (en) * | 2013-12-12 | 2016-02-10 | 北京金风科创风电设备有限公司 | A method and device for controlling constant power of a wind turbine under full operating conditions, and a wind turbine |
| EP3156646B1 (en) * | 2015-10-16 | 2018-05-16 | Nordex Energy GmbH | Wind farm facility with a speed regulator and a generator regulator |
| DE102017121563A1 (en) * | 2017-09-18 | 2019-03-21 | Wobben Properties Gmbh | Wind energy plant and method for operating a wind energy plant |
-
2021
- 2021-01-22 EP EP21152924.3A patent/EP4033090B1/en active Active
-
2022
- 2022-01-19 US US17/579,389 patent/US11952980B2/en active Active
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| US4193005A (en) * | 1978-08-17 | 1980-03-11 | United Technologies Corporation | Multi-mode control system for wind turbines |
| US7863767B2 (en) * | 2005-10-31 | 2011-01-04 | Chapdrive As | Turbine driven electric power production system and a method for control thereof |
| US8803347B2 (en) * | 2010-04-12 | 2014-08-12 | Vestas Wind Systems A/S | Control of a wind turbine generator |
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Also Published As
| Publication number | Publication date |
|---|---|
| EP4033090A1 (en) | 2022-07-27 |
| CN114810488B (en) | 2025-04-01 |
| EP4033090B1 (en) | 2024-08-28 |
| CN114810488A (en) | 2022-07-29 |
| US20220235737A1 (en) | 2022-07-28 |
| EP4033090C0 (en) | 2024-08-28 |
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